anelastic deformation
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Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (23) ◽  
pp. 7220
Author(s):  
Hua Qian Ang

The anelastic deformation, resulting from partial reversal of {101¯2} twinning, is studied at room temperature to 150 °C on several commercial die-cast magnesium alloys for the first time. The magnitude of anelastic strain decreases with increasing temperature. For inter-alloy comparison, AZ91 shows the largest maximum anelastic strain, while AM40 and AM60 show similar maximum anelastic strain. The phenomenon is discussed in terms of solid solution softening and hardening of slip planes and how they influence twinning. T5-aged AE44 consistently shows smaller magnitude of anelasticity compared to as-cast AE44, suggesting that the precipitates formed during ageing may decrease the twin-boundary mobility and further suppress untwinning. Presence of anelasticity poses a challenge to yield strength measurement using the conventional 0.2% offset method, and a more accurate and consistent method of using a higher offset strain or a lower modulus is proposed in this study.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Li ◽  
Guoxujia Chen ◽  
He Zheng ◽  
Weiwei Meng ◽  
Shuangfeng Jia ◽  
...  

AbstractFrom the mechanical perspectives, the influence of point defects is generally considered at high temperature, especially when the creep deformation dominates. Here, we show the stress-induced reversible oxygen vacancy migration in CuO nanowires at room temperature, causing the unanticipated anelastic deformation. The anelastic strain is associated with the nucleation of oxygen-deficient CuOx phase, which gradually transforms back to CuO after stress releasing, leading to the gradual recovery of the nanowire shape. Detailed analysis reveals an oxygen deficient metastable CuOx phase that has been overlooked in the literatures. Both theoretical and experimental investigations faithfully predict the oxygen vacancy diffusion pathways in CuO. Our finding facilitates a better understanding of the complicated mechanical behaviors in materials, which could also be relevant across multiple scientific disciplines, such as high-temperature superconductivity and solid-state chemistry in Cu-O compounds, etc.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cecilia McHugh ◽  
Leonardo Seeber ◽  
Michael Steckler ◽  
Syed Humayun Akhter ◽  
Nickolas Dubin

<p>Incoming sediment thickness and composition are primary factors in the morphology and shallow structure of subduction boundaries. Sediment thickness in the Indian Ocean increases SE to NW along the Sunda arc. From <1km along Java to >15km where the boundary encounters the Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta (GBD). Here the accretionary prism broadens to the NW to >300 km wide. It is dominated by shallow-water to non-marine sediment. This segment also features a broad shallow megathrust overlain by linear anticlines rooted in splay faults. It is entirely above sea level and blind in its frontal part. This GBD segment transitions to a more familiar subduction structure and morphology along the submerged Arakan segment to the SE. The SE portion of this segment is characterized by larger splay faults that expose deep-water sediment with mud diapirism forming volcanoes and circular synclines. With increasing sediment input, the NW portion of the Arakan segment encroaches onto the GBD shelf. Both the SE and NW portions of the Arakan segment ruptured in the Mw>8.5 1762 tsunamigenic earthquake according to field and modeling evidence.</p><p>Uplifted coral reefs and marine terraces along the Myanmar and Bangladesh coasts document a >500 km rupture in 1762. The uplift, ranging from 6 m to 2 m from south to north, has been linked to rupture on the megathrust and on shallow splays. Tsunami deposits are traced for ~10 km along the St. Martin’s Island anticline and for >40 km along the Teknaf peninsula. Microfossils and mollusk assemblages in these deposits are consistently of shallow water affinity and date the tsunami to 1762. This deposit covers only a small fraction of the inferred megathrust rupture. If it is representative of the total tsunami distribution, a local anticline may have been the main source. Evidence from live coral microatolls show uplift on St. Martin’s Island continuing 250 years after the earthquake. This motion could stem from continued anelastic deformation of the anticline updip of the rupture. More widely distributed evidence from sediment and corals could address questions about megathrust and splay behavior in 1762 and after. Plans include multichannel seismic surveying, high resolution subbottom profiling and 40 m long piston coring to compare the SE to NW shelf portions to the Arakan segment along the Myanmar and Bangladesh coasts. More generally, we aim to better understand subduction and geohazards along thickly sedimented systems.</p>


Author(s):  
Zbigniew H. Stachurski ◽  
Gang Wang ◽  
Xiaohua Tan

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich Faul ◽  
Harriet Lau

<p>Grain scale diffusive processes are involved in the rheology at convective timescales, but also at the transient timescales of seismic wave propagation, solid Earth tides and post-glacial rebound. Seismic and geodetic data can therefore potentially provide constraints on lower mantle properties such as grain size that are unconstrained otherwise. Current models of the transient viscosity of the lower mantle infer an absorption band of finite width in frequency. Seismic models predict a low frequency end to the absorption band at timescales corresponding to the longest normal modes of about an hour. By contrast, geodetic models infer the onset of an absorption band at these frequencies to cover anelastic deformation at timescales up to 18.6 years. A difficulty in extracting frequency dependence from mode and tide data is its convolution with depth dependence.</p><p>To circumvent this problem we select a distinct set of seismic normal modes and solid Earth body tides that have similar depth sensitivity in the lower mantle. These processes collectively span a period range from 7 minutes to 18.6 years. This allows the examination of frequency dependent energy dissipation over the lower mantle across 6 orders of magnitude. To forward model the transient creep response of the lower mantle we use a laboratory-based model of intrinsic dissipation that we adapt to the lower mantle mineralogy. This extended Burgers model represents an empirical fit to data principally from olivine, but also MgO and other compounds. The underlying microphysical model envisions a sequence of processes that begin with a broad plateau in dissipation at the highest frequencies after the onset of anelastic behavior, followed by a broad absorption band spanning many decades in frequency. The absorption band transitions seamlessly into viscous behavior. Since dissipation both for the absorption band and for (Newtonian) viscous behavior is due to diffusion along grain boundaries there can be no gap between the end of the absorption band and onset of viscous behavior.</p><p>Modeling of the planetary response to small strain excitation necessitates consideration of inertia and self gravitation. The phase lag due to solid Earth body tides therefore does not correspond directly to the intrinsic dissipation measured in the laboratory as material property. We have developed a self consistent theory that combines the planetary response with time-dependent anelastic deformation of rocks. Results from a broad range of forward models show that at lower mantle pressures periods of modes fall onto the broad plateau in dissipation at the onset of anelastic behavior. This explains the apparent frequency independence or even negative frequency dependence observed for some normal modes. At longer timescales, solid Earth tides fall on the frequency-dependent absorption band. This reconciles seemingly contradictory results published by seismic and tidal studies. Observations at even longer timescales are needed to constrain the transition from absorption band to viscous behavior.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. eaax5703 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Diederichs ◽  
E. K. Nissen ◽  
L. J. Lajoie ◽  
R. M. Langridge ◽  
S. R. Malireddi ◽  
...  

A key paradigm in seismology is that earthquakes release elastic strain energy accumulated during an interseismic period on approximately planar faults. Earthquake slip models may be further informed by empirical relations such as slip to length. Here, we use differential lidar to demonstrate that the Papatea fault—a key element within the 2016 Mw 7.8 Kaikōura earthquake rupture—has a distinctly nonplanar geometry, far exceeded typical coseismic slip-to-length ratios, and defied Andersonian mechanics by slipping vertically at steep angles. Additionally, its surface deformation is poorly reproduced by elastic dislocation models, suggesting the Papatea fault did not release stored strain energy as typically assumed, perhaps explaining its seismic quiescence in back-projections. Instead, it slipped in response to neighboring fault movements, creating a localized space problem, accounting for its anelastic deformation field. Thus, modeling complex, multiple-fault earthquakes as slip on planar faults embedded in an elastic medium may not always be appropriate.


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 2374-2391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Massimo Cuomo

Gradient plasticity has been introduced to predict localization bands induced by softening or damage, and has been extended to micromorphic models used for materials with microstructure and scale effects. Motivated by the consideration that in complex materials there may exist different mechanisms for the evolution of anelastic deformation at the small and at the large scale, and that they may interact, in the paper a model of second gradient material with two different evolution laws for the macroscopic and for the microscopic plastic strain is proposed, the latter related to the presence of second gradient deformation. The model is intended to be used for metamaterials, and its relevant properties can be obtained from an homogenization analysis at the microlevel.


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